AT A time when the governnent is mulling
to shut down three units of HMT: HMT Watches, HMT Chinar Watches and
HMT Bearing, another HMT unit Hindustan Machine Tools’ Kalamassery
unit has posted net profit of over Rs. 2 crore during 2014-15.
The PSU unit also looks strong for the
next financial year.
It may be mentioned that keeping the
momentum of good show, the PSU has recorded profit for the fifth
successive year.
The total business turnover during the
last year was about Rs. 74 crore.
The last financial year the HMT unit
was part of the maiden venture that joined two government
undertakings-Bharat Electronics and Naval Physical and Oceanographic
Laboratory-to manufacture directing gear for sonars in naval ships.
Fresh orders for the same gear are expected this year.
The HMT unit made a profit of over Rs.
5 crore during 2013-14 over a total business turnover of Rs. 64
crore. Business target set for the current financial year is Rs. 82
crore.
The unit had received orders worth
about Rs. 30 crore for computerized numerically controlled lathes.
However there is a catch. The trade
union is concerned about the falling number of employees at the unit.
They pointed out that without
appointment of fresh hands the unit’s profitability could be hit.
In a related development, HMT
Employees’ Union, CITU, has demanded that the 2007 wage revision
should be implemented immediately.
They also pressed for fresh
recruitment.
A statement issued recently by General
Secretary of the Union K. Chandran Pillai described the HMT
Kalamassery unit as the sole engineering unit in the State making
continuous profit and called for immediate implementation of the wage
revision.
Pillai recalled that employees were in
protest mode for 1,520 days before the government agreed to a wages
revision in 22 years in February 2014.
Even during the protest action, started
on January 1, 2010, the unit never went into loss, the statement
added.
Kalamssery unit now operated with 290
employees on its rolls and 250 contract workers, The Hindu reported
quoting trade union sources..
Around 200 of them will retire in three
years, which may pose a serious threat to the functioning of the
unit.
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